Next, our tour took us to Brougham Castle. Ann Radcliffe visited in 1794 and described Brougham as if it were the setting for one of her Gothic novels:
"Some of the walls remaining are twelve feet thick, and the places still visible, in which the massy gates were held to them by hinges and bolts of uncommon size. A fuller proof of the many sacrifices of comfort and convenience, by which the highest classes in former ages were glad to purchase security, is very seldom afforded, than by the three detached parts still left of this edifice; . . . they exhibit symptoms of the cruelties, by which their first lords revenged themselves upon others the wretchedness of the continual suspicions felt by themselves. Dungeons, secret passages and heavy iron rings remain to hint of unhappy wretches, who were, perhaps, rescued only by death from these horrible engines of a tyrant's will. The bones probably of such victims are laid beneath the damp earth of these vaults."
We visited on a sunny July day and it was difficult to imagine this dark, Gothic edifice! A more uplifting, but sadly untrue, version of the Castle's inhabitants, is also included in Radcliffe's account of Brougham as:
"rendered more interesting by having been occasionally the residence of Sir Philip Sidney; who had only to look from the windows of this once noble edifice to see his own 'Arcadia' spreading on every side. The landscape probably awakened his imagination, for it was during a visit here, that the great part of the work was written."
It seems that this mistake was started by Clarke in his 1789 Survey of the Lakes. Sir Philip Sidney was never in the Lakes, although Wordsworth picked up the takes and wrote in The Prelude: